WEBVTT KARI THURSDAY THE YOURS TO MADISO TOWNSHIP, AS WERE MY SUREST DEPUTIES. -- THEY WERE ESCORTED BY SUREST DEPUTIES. THIS IS WHERE MONOPOLY -- BRADLEY AND LIVED. AND WHERE THE 2-YEAR-OLD WAS ALLEGEDLY INJURED. SHE DIED LATER AT THE HOSPITAL. ALSO TODAY COME OPENING STATEMENTS. BRADLEY YOUNG FACES A MURDER CHARGE, HIS EX-GIRLFRIEND REBECCA KENNER HAS ALREADY PLEADED GUILTY AND HAS BEEN

"Within days after that, she was sending Bradley personal pictures of herself in a state of undress," Schiavone said.

Putting their characters aside, evidence is what prosecutors focused on Tuesday as they called their first witness, a radiologist from Children's Hospital.

She showed jurors an image of Kinsley's brain next to a normal child's brain and talked about the bleeding on Kinsley's image.

"We wouldn't expect bleeding around a child's brain, a child shouldn't have bleeding," said Dr. Marguerite Care. "It's not something I would expect from just a routine child falling off of a couch, or falling off a a changing table, or something."

Care's opinion was that Kinsley suffered inflicted injuries.

"This is a case that's going to prove to you beyond a reasonable doubt that he [did] it," Gmoser said, pointing at Young.

The defense said Young didn't murder the child.

Schiavone said there's no question the toddler died of a brain injury, but said this is a case of who done it, or what done it.

He told jurors Kinsley would often fall off chairs and butt her head.

"She would bang her head on walls, the floor, she would hit her face on the floor and walls. This child had bruises all the time," Schiavone said.

Gmoser said that the morning Kinsley was injured, Young was alone with the child on the couch, while Rebekah was in the bedroom.

"At about five o'clock in the morning, Brad came into the bedroom and said said, 'Did you hear her scream, did you hear her scream? She was screaming and she just went limp,'" Gmoser said.

That's one of many stories the defense said Rebekah told authorities.

Schiavone said it's hard to know which version she'll tell when she takes the stand.

"Ladies and gentleman, I cannot tell you how many different versions there are of this story. There are so many, the evidence will show that there are so many that you don't have enough paper in front of you to take notes," Schiavone said.

Kinner pleaded guilty earlier this year to involuntary manslaughter, permitting child abuse and endangering children, and was given an 11-year sentence.